Sue Monk Kidd
IT'S a place that has always been risky terrain for novelists...
so imagining Jesus taking a wife (and the sister of Judas, no less) was certain
to be a big gamble for Sue Monk Kidd.
In his phenomenal global bestseller, The Da Vinci Code, Dan
Brown reworked the old trope that Jesus married Mary Magdalen, but The Book of
Longings is a completely different kettle of fish, approaching the exquisitely
sensitive topic of the Christian Messiah’s marital status with a fascinating, fictional
wife, and far more reverential empathy and historical insight.
Grounded in meticulous research, and evoking the political
and cultural landscape of ancient Galilee with extraordinary authenticity, Kidd’s
remarkable novel is an audacious feminist take on the story of the New
Testament, and a highly ambitious undertaking from the author whose 2002 debut,
The Secret Life of Bees, spent more than one hundred weeks on the New York
Times bestseller list.
Fully aware from the start that her project would be
controversial in some quarters, Kidd is unapologetic about her portrayal of the
central figure of Christianity, claiming that ‘the aim of the novelist is not
to hold up a mirror to the world but to imagine what’s possible.’ And it is in that ‘lost’ area of Jesus’s life, between adolescence
and the age of thirty when his ministry began, that Kidd portrays Jesus not as
‘God the Son’ but as a ‘fully human’ man who – in an age when the Jewish
religion dictated that a man could ‘not abstain from having a wife’ – falls in
love with Ana, daughter of the head scribe to Galilee’s ruler, Herod Antipas.
AUDACIOUS CONCEPT: Sue Monk Kidd |
Twelve-year-old Ana is a rebellious and educated young
woman, a gifted writer with a questioning and brilliant mind, who writes secret
narratives about the matriarchs of the Scriptures and is determined to be ‘a
chronicler’ of their lost stories.
Click HERE for Lancashire Post review
Click HERE for Lancashire Post review
Raised in a wealthy family in Galilee where he father
Matthias is chief scribe to the tetrarch Herod Antipas, she is sheltered from
the brutality of Rome’s occupation of Israel, but her adopted brother, Judas,
consorts with the dangerous radicals who agitate against their rulers.
When she comes of age, Ana who now believes that ‘the entire
world was a cage,’ is forced into a betrothal to elderly widower Nathaniel to
further her father’s ambitions and it’s a prospect that horrifies her. But then
a chance encounter with eighteen-year-old Jesus in the marketplace changes
everything… his ideas, the ‘tiny fire’ in his remarkable eyes, and his passion
are intoxicating. When Nathaniel dies before the wedding, Ana instead marries
Jesus, a union which evolves with love and conflict, humour and pathos in
Nazareth, where Ana makes a home with
Jesus, who is both ‘a peacemaker and a provocateur,’ his brothers, and their mother Mary. But Ana’s pent-up longings intensify amid the continued turbulent resistance to Rome’s occupation of Israel, partially led by Judas.
Jesus, who is both ‘a peacemaker and a provocateur,’ his brothers, and their mother Mary. But Ana’s pent-up longings intensify amid the continued turbulent resistance to Rome’s occupation of Israel, partially led by Judas.
When Ana commits a brazen act that puts her in peril, she
flees to Alexandria in Egypt, where startling revelations and greater dangers
unfold, and she finds refuge in unexpected surroundings. Her fate will finally
be decided during a stunning convergence of events, now considered to be among
the most far-reaching in human history.
The Book of Longings is not for everyone – apart from the
religious implications, the dialogue is occasionally out of step, and there are
feminist flights of fancy which some may find far-flung, hovering too close to
more contemporary 20th and 21st century thought processes
– but the fictional Ana still remains a brave, inspirational and intriguing
woman. And that’s because this is essentially her show – a story
not just of her love for and marriage to a remarkable preacher and radical reformer,
but a woman in her own right who wanted to be a chronicler of ‘silenced’ women
and their hitherto unrecognised achievements.
While Jesus remains a secondary player, staying chiefly out
of view, Ana’s passion, determination, ambitions and personal conflicts make
her a fully-rounded woman, and help both her life, her sense of self and her
personality to take centre stage throughout. With time and place in perfect harmony, and daringly conceived, The Book of Longings is essentially a celebration and remembrance of
centuries of hidden women’s history… ‘I
am Ana… I am a voice.’
(Tinder Press, hardback, £20)
No comments:
Post a Comment